Howl
Howl
by Allen Ginsberg
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Howl Themes

Little Words, Big Ideas

Madness

In Howl, madness is relative. In fact, this poem turns our common notions of sanity on their head. People society typically sees as perfectly normal, the speaker considers insane. People that socie...

Rules and Order

No group defied the rules that defined orderly life in 1950s America quite like the Beats. Ginsberg was no anarchist, but he believed that the severity of the justice and health systems stunted the...

Freedom and Confinement

Like that other classic of Beat literature, Jack Kerouac's On the Road, Howl celebrates personal freedom and breaking free from social norms. Travel is one means of acquiring freedom, the character...

Religion

Is Ginsberg really a religious poet, or is he just "spiritual," which is a word we sometimes use to describe people who seem to believe in "something," only we're not sure what? After all, the spea...

Visions of America

Many writers have explored America from the top down. They have focused on what the most renowned and respectable people do – the crème de la crème – and assume that it repres...